@NikiC github.com/php/php-src/commit/… => should remain "-dev" while tagging RCs? Or it should indeed be "RC" but int the tags only and remaining "-dev" in the "8.1 development branch"?
@Sara Which encodings are supported for method names, I know well your table-flip repo, that is of course UTF-8, but say, for example, could I have a method with SJIS encoding (just to portrary an example)
Plus sorry to address you directly but I feel you are the one who knows this best, also Hi!
@Derick nope, I haven't set that up yet (will probably do on Thursday evening). Anyway, PHP 8.1 uses VS16. (PHP 8.2 might use VS17, if we manage to get that working; VS2022 is still in preview)
@Derick about to do it now, but I don't quite get why it should be 8.1.0RC2-dev in configure.ac while PHP_VERSION remains "8.1.0-dev" and will only be set to "8.1.0RC2" for the tag
Actually looking at the functions class_implements, class_parents and class_uses are part of the SPL extension while class_exists, interface_exists and trait_exists are a part of the Classes/Object Functions on the wiki. This might explain the inconsistency
personally I'm fine with functions that work for class/interface/trait being named class_*, it's an artifact of the fact they are all "class entries" internally, and meta functions like that are inherently coupled to internals a bit
@Tiffany my understanding is probably not worth doing. The problem is that with multiple maintained branches means that any changes either take quiet a bit or work to merge, as they have to be applied to the lowest maintained branch and then merged upwards, or they have an ongoing cost as they make merging bug-fixes harder.
Adding comments to functions and macros is possibly a more useful 'boring' thing.
@NikiC the main thing people objecting to moving, is having a single linear history of bugs, and also not having to risk losing a whole load of bug reports (because that is totally a thing that is valuable) if the PHP project ever moves away from using github.
If we: * Close bugs.php.net to all new bugs, except those created by logged in php.net accounts. * Mirror any new bugs created on github to bugs.php.net with the appropriate packages etc. * Mirror comments + updates from github to bugs.php.net.
3, ok not a lot, yes it's normal to have people coding like shit if that is what you are refering to
it's a usual problem, management won't see it while that cheddar is cranking or they don't want to see it, it's normal to have a huge technical debt specially in big companies
@JRL I'm going to prepare a draft of the order-enum RFC. Anything you want me to include, or bikesheds that should be had first? (Eg, Order vs Ordering vs Sort vs Sorting, etc.)
@MarkR I don't need to know... I was suggested to use empty() but I wrote the first function instead to avoid accessing the property more than once ... I also like that the first function gives more specific log messages
If a sort required returning an enum, I'd give it 30 seconds before someone wrote a function that returned the enum based on the old behaviour. I mean, we'd probably ship with it in core.
right, that's why i would say error instead of return a value
if the program encounters something unsortable like that in the middle of execution, it is fairly unlikely that the program will be able to complete as expected without developer intervention
that doesn't matter to me; more like E_DEPRECATED "comparison of uncomparable values is deprecated, and will throw an Error in the future" (something like that, so that users can fix/adapt their code)
@JRL I think what he means is that when something uncomparable is encountered emit a E_WARNING or E_DEPRECATE indicating that sorting uncomparable values is deprecated/non-sense and keep the current "broken" behaviour
i can personally see the advantages of both, and in general i would defer to what voters wanted on that issue. I would argue that we should work towards uncomparable sorts resulting in an error, but I would personally be fine with a deprecation path OR with doing it immediately.
Throwing would certainly give opportunity to include a message saying what happened e.g. SortingException msg => "value FooClass could not be compared to int"
that sort of thing would become much more important with my operator overloads as well if they were also included
this would however allow me to change my RFC so that the return of __compareTo() is the Ordering enum
Also, just to confirm @Crell, in this RFC we're introducing the Ordering enum and allowing it to work in the places you would use a sorting function in place of -1, 0, 1, but we're not replacing the int values as valid, so people can still use the int values instead
the idea being that this addition allows us to move in that direction in the future we wanted to
@JRL Correct. Whether we deprecate raw ints in the future is for someone else in the future to ask. We're not doing that here. Just providing a closed set of constants, really.
Should we punt on Incomparable until the custom operators RFC? It seems like the only place it would realistically be used.
@Crell I don't think so. It could still be used with usort(), and it's one of the things that this enum would make much easier over using ints
or rather, it's the thing that isn't represented by the int values but does have a concept in the engine, so it would be the thing that adds something tangible immediately for PHP devs